I do not have a large collection of brushes. Like 3 boar and 5 badger in best and silvertip variety. Do not use the boars very often because I have moved to more of a cream rather than soap user. Still use MWF and Tabac soaps. I am satisfied with all my badgers and use the two best badgers the most. I am retired now so I do not have to shave everyday unless I feel like it.

Have been reading this forum and seem to see a trend in discussion about synthetic brushes. Because I am satisfied with the brushes I use now will you guys chime in and tell me why I should buy a synthetic? Also what mfg would you suggest?

If you're happy with what you have I see no reason for you to buy one other than curiosity. But be aware that there is no grading that anyone agrees with or that works for all manufacturers. What I'm trying to say is that it's the wild west when it comes to finding one that you might like. The best way is to find user comments as best you can, and go from there based on the comments and your own findings.

But again, if you're happy with what you have why go through all of that?

Having written that, I'm happy with all of my synthetics, they are all quite soft, but of course there are variations, and I'm also happy with the varying backbone that they all have. But I live for variation in my shaves. I have no incentive to sell any brushes or to acquire more.

All has been said, I guess. Synthetic brushes are not, IMO, better then badger or boar brushes... they're simply different, and great in their own right. The only way to really know... is trying one yourself.

David

“Use any means to keep from being a genius, all means to become one.” John Cage

Why not? You're curious aren't you? I stubbornly resisted any intrusion onto that foreign shore, telling myself plastic brushes were a silly boy's toy. Not suitable for a real caveman who uses animal hair. Then one day I spotted one that caught my eye and the price was a song. One more barrier broken down. No need to ask, just placed the order and opened a new door.

I have been using Mühle Silvertip Fibre synthetics with very good results and am very pleased with them.

The brush works equally well with soaps and creams and handles some soaps that have the reputation to be difficult to produce a good lather with ease.
Work makes me a frequent traveller and one significant benefit of synthetic brushes is the quick time that it takes them to dry.
Rub the brush after use on a bath towel, put it in a container and it is ready to go...

After the first few months of use I tried some of my earlier silvertips again, but was so pleased with the synthetic brushes that I continued to use them exclusively.
But recently I have come back to real silvertips and have currently two on order.
It remeains to be seen whether these two will be as universal at the synthetics, but sometimes it is just fun to try a different brush.

I like to change my routine from time to time, reminds me of how I pick the evening drink from my liquor and wine cabinets...
Cheers.

IMHO the Omega S-Brush is far better than a Syntex for travel mode, much kinder to the skin for face lathering. I tried a Syntex with the same handle as my current S-Brush and put it away. Not happy with face lathering results, and there is a world of difference with the S-Brush. In travel mode I face lather with a shot of cream from a tube, and have an easy time cleaning up with the fast drying S-Brush.

At home I'm working on a puck of Vermont Country Store Apothecary Lime Musk soap. Not so much by itself, but with a shot of KMF unscented and whipped up with a Bestshave Nr. 6 brush (mostly boar), it makes great lather. The brush I can pre-soak, give it a shake and a once-over with a hair dryer afterward, then leave it out to dry.

Rufust445 wrote:IMHO the Omega S-Brush is far better than a Syntex for travel mode, much kinder to the skin for face lathering. I tried a Syntex with the same handle as my current S-Brush and put it away. Not happy with face lathering results, and there is a world of difference with the S-Brush. In travel mode I face lather with a shot of cream from a tube, and have an easy time cleaning up with the fast drying S-Brush.

At home I'm working on a puck of Vermont Country Store Apothecary Lime Musk soap. Not so much by itself, but with a shot of KMF unscented and whipped up with a Bestshave Nr. 6 brush (mostly boar), it makes great lather. The brush I can pre-soak, give it a shake and a once-over with a hair dryer afterward, then leave it out to dry.

And if it doesn't have time to fully dry, well, what of it? The brush won't be hurt by staying moist. They could be put away dripping and they wouldn't be hurt.

I still use my badger occasionally for face shaves, but for head shaving I have gone exclusively synthetic. I just find them the perfect mix of softness and backbone. I agree with some of the comments that there's no reason you "should" buy one. But if you're curious, in my opinion the Whipped Dog 24mm with standard loft is the best overall value. Great handle, soft tips, and plenty of backbone for someone used to badgers. You can get one of the new Razorocks, a Fine, or even an Omega S-Brush for cheaper. The handles aren't as good on any of them and the S-brush knot isn't nearly as good.

If you're happy with your current brushes and your RAD is not acting up, why change. However as such time either of those variables do change, the new-gen synthetic brushes have reached new levels of comfort and performance. I use a gen 4 myself.

Nic, I suspect you are having some fun with this, and here's my retort in kind, if I may --- as to using canned foam with any brush, synthetic, boar, horse, or badger. I doubt if anyone who's using canned lather is feeling the need to also use a brush, correct?

Brian, there are a lot of videos (depending on the search terms one uses ) that are a lot more interesting than that! Example, I once followed a link to a guy who was sharpening a straight razor on a concrete block, then using it dry to shave. OK, I concede the video you saw was probably better than the guy and the concrete block!

The sad part is that the video I saw, the gent was 100% serous. It wasn't spoof, anything unusual, or any such thing. It was like, "OK son, this is how you use canned goop. You need a brush to slather it onto your face.".